Myles M. Mattenson
ATTORNEY AT LAW 5550 Topanga Canyon Blvd. Suite 200 Woodland Hills, California 91367 Telephone (818) 313-9060 Facsimile (818) 313-9260 Email: MMM@MattensonLaw.com Web: http://www.MattensonLaw.com |
A Customer Slips And Falls In Your Coin Laundry. Are You Liable? |
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A Customer Slips And Falls In Your Coin Laundry. A customer slips and falls on the floor of your coin laundry and suffers substantial injury to his back. An ambulance is called to transport the customer to a nearby hospital. The wailing sound of the siren is heard less and less as the ambulance travels down the street away from your coin laundry. As the siren sound diminishes, you think more and more about whether you paid your last premium for business premises liability insurance. What caused the slip and fall? Was it liquid soap left over from a customer's carelessness three hours earlier? Was it a banana peel dropped upon the floor of your coin laundry by the child of another customer? Was it that fresh coat of wax you had just applied to the floor? How often do you inspect the floor and other surfaces within your coin laundry for soap spills and other problems? Do you post any signs warning customers to be careful and to clean up their spills? In a situation where it is the substance on the floor which made the floor dangerous, rather than the floor itself, the injured customer will have to eventually prove to a judge or jury that you had (1) actual notice, or (2) constructive notice, of the defect. Actual notice is found where you have actual knowledge of the problem and have had a reasonable time in which to rectify the situation. Constructive notice, however, involves a situation in which, given the passage of time, you should have discovered and rectified the problem. In a case originating in a San Francisco courtroom, a janitor in the employ of a building maintenance company sought damages for personal injuries he sustained on the premises of a department store to which he was assigned to work. The plaintiff's hours of work on Fridays were from 8:00 p.m. to 4:00 a.m. During his initial hour of work on Fridays, however, he noted that customers were still in the store, and as a result, he confined his work to emptying waste containers. He also felt that his work shoes did not "look well" in front of customers, so he wore his street shoes for the initial hour. During the course of that first hour, he noticed dust on a ledge between the first and second floors of the department store. The plaintiff started to descend a stairway to this ledge. As he "took his first downward step and before his hand grasped the railing, [his] right foot slipped out from under him, and he fell down the stairway with his hands in the air and his feet before him. He landed on his back . . . ." A salesman within the department store came to his aid and "picked up a dry piece of banana peel from the front portion of the step and said, 'This is what you slipped on.'" According to the plaintiff, either the salesman or the assistant manager of the store stated "'That's the darn kids that have been playing around.'" In approving a jury verdict in favor of the plaintiff, the Court of Appeal observed: "The question is whether, in the circumstances, it can be inferred that a dangerous condition had existed for such a length of time as to justify charging the defendant with lack of ordinary care in failing to discover and remedy it before the plaintiff was injured . . . . It may be conceded that ordinary care in the case of a public market involves a more vigilant outlook than in the case of an apartment house lobby." The Court of Appeal also observed that the department store had made no inspection of the stairway since the plaintiff had quit his work at 1:20 a.m. the previous morning. Bananas, aside from being a good source of potassium, supply a substantial number of lawsuits for review by the courts! In another matter originating in a Safeway store in Gridley, California, a woman went to the cashier's stand, got in line with her ten year old son, and while standing there, noticed that she had forgotten to get some lemons. She left her son in the line and went back to the fruit and vegetable section to obtain the lemons. "After taking only a step or two she slipped on a banana and fell." She shortly thereafter "saw a squashed banana on the floor, a mark on the floor which her shoe had made and banana on her dress, shoe and hose." The Court of Appeal, in ordering the trial court to permit the case to proceed to a full trial, noted that the record showed that no inspection of the area had been made for a period of at least 30 minutes before the accident. The Court concluded that "Concededly a person operating a fruit and vegetable section in a store should . . . in the exercise of ordinary care, maintain a more vigilant outlook than would be required in the operation of some other type of business where the danger of things falling on the floor upon which a person might easily slip and fall is not so obvious." In another case originating at a gasoline station and parking lot on Grand Avenue in Los Angeles, a woman made a telephone call from a public telephone booth on the property. As she stepped out of the booth, "she slipped on an oily spot . . . and thereby suffered a severe injury to her left ankle." The incident occurred at approximately 3:30 p.m.; trial testimony indicated that "every morning about 7:30 one of the employees sweeps out the booth -- that it receives no other regular attention." Since the evidence demonstrated that the premises had not been inspected in eight hours the Court of Appeal instructed the trial court to permit a full trial of the plaintiff's claim that the owner had constructive notice of the oil spot and failed to eliminate the hazard. How much time do you think the judges that considered these cases would give you to inspect your coin laundry before concluding that you should have discovered, for example, liquid soap on your floor during a busy Saturday? [This column is intended to provide general information only and is not intended to provide specific legal advice; if you have a specific question regarding the law, you should contact an attorney of your choice. Suggestions for topics to be discussed in this column are welcome.] Reprinted from New Era Magazine Myles M. Mattenson © 1996-2002 |